The Daily Courier

New ‘Iggy’ arrives on world stage

- By DONNA SPENCER

Another “Iggy” has landed on the internatio­nal hockey scene.

Jade Iginla, daughter of Hockey Hall of Famer Jarome Iginla, is among the 23 women representi­ng Canada at the world under-18 championsh­ip that started Monday in Wisconsin.

After a five-day reselectio­n camp in Calgary in May, Canada was to open the reschedule­d tournament Monday against Finland.

Iginla appreciate­s wearing the Maple Leaf for the first time in her career, more so after the pandemic erased the previous event.

“I think the first two words that come to mind are gratitude and pride,” Iginla said.

University of Alberta Pandas head coach Howie Draper returns to the bench after navigating the under-18 women to gold in 2019 and silver in 2020.

Iginla, the oldest child of Jarome and Kara, compiled 18 goals and 10 assists in 22 games for Hockey Academy Kelowna’s under-18 team this past season. She’s committed to play for Brown University next season.

Younger brothers Tij and Joe also play hockey. Tij was drafted ninth overall by the Western Hockey League’s Seattle Thunderbir­ds in 2021.

Jarome played the majority of his 1,554 NHL games for the Calgary Flames. He holds the franchise record in goals and points.

He famously assisted on Sidney Crosby’s overtime goal to win Olympic men’s hockey gold for Canada in 2010, when Crosby yelled “Iggy” to indicate he was open. Jarome was inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame last year.

“He’s my dad first and that’s what always comes to mind before all his other accomplish­ments,” Jade said. “My dad, having played such a high level of hockey for so long ... whenever I have, say, a bad experience or something that didn’t go my way, he immediatel­y references something that happened to him, and it’s always similar. It always helps to find common ground in that.”

She possesses elements of her father’s power-forward game.

“What we like about Jade is she seems to really connect well with all of her teammates,” Draper said. “She seems to be able to read off them really well. She obviously has a high hockey intelligen­ce.

“She doesn’t shy away from the tough areas. She protects the puck really well and as a result, she creates great opportunit­ies for her teammates and linemates. She’s fun to watch just like all the rest of these girls. They all have some special elements. In that way, I think we have a really strong group.”

Hockey Canada held a panel during selection camp with some women’s national-team players who won Olympic gold in Beijing in February.

“They just spewed wisdom,” Iginla said. Among them was 25-year-old defender Micah Zandee-Hart, who won world under-18 gold in 2014 and captained the team to silver the following year.

“I asked about leadership and how everyone can be their own leader, being different personalit­ies, being more quiet or loud,” Iginla recalled.

“Micah had a great answer about really just leaning into what you can do. If that means making conversati­on with the person next to you, and that pushes you out of your comfort zone today, then that’s a good day.”

Canada lost its lone pre-tournament game 3-1 to the United States. Iginla’s Kelowna teammate Brooke Disher of Lake Country, was named under-18 captain. Defender Sarah MacEachern of Cornwall, Ont., and forward Karel Prefontain­e of Gatineau, Que., were chosen assistant captains.

Two-thirds of Canada’s Olympic team played in a world under-18 championsh­ip at some point in their careers. Captain MariePhili­p Poulin and veteran forward Natalie Spooner appeared in the first in 2008.

Canada is in Group A in Wisconsin alongside the Finns, Sweden and the host United States. Czechia, Germany, Slovakia and Switzerlan­d comprise Group B.

After facing the Finns on Monday, Canada meets Sweden on Tuesday and caps the preliminar­y round Thursday against the U.S.

The quarterfin­als are Friday, followed by Sunday’s semifinals.

The players’ fears in January over whether there would be no world under-18-championsh­ip for a second straight year has been replaced by a drive to get the gold medal.

“They’re like animals that have been caged for a significan­t period of time and you just let them out of that cage,” Draper said. “The energy, the excitement and enthusiasm is at a high level right now.”

 ?? The Associated Press ?? Jade Iginla looks on from the bench during a national women’s under-18 inter-squad game in Calgary, May 27.
The Associated Press Jade Iginla looks on from the bench during a national women’s under-18 inter-squad game in Calgary, May 27.

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